The final scheduled day of the regular season is here, and there’s a bit of potential chaos left to sort out in the American League wild-card race.

The Indians, Rays and Rangers are all still vying for two wild-card spots. And though Cleveland has a one-game lead over the other two teams, there’s still a scenario that could play out where Terry Francona’s team misses the playoffs. More on that in a moment.

First, though, let’s take a look at the three teams and what they face on Sunday.

Jimenez has been Cleveland’s rock in the second half, rolling up a 1.86 ERA in a dozen starts after the All-Star break. In his lone start against the Twins this season, he allowed two runs and struck out 10 in a six-inning quality start.

Need to know: Outfielder Michael Brantley had his 11-game hitting streak snapped on Saturday, but he’s still batting .363 in September; in Cleveland’s nine-game winning streak, he has four games with multiple RBI.

The Rays are 20-6 in Moore’s starts this season. He spent about a month on the disabled list with elbow soreness, and has a 2.28 ERA in his five September starts since he was activated. Moore has great swing-and-miss stuff, but his control is an eternal issue.

Need to know: Youngster Wil Myers went through a bit of an August swoon (.209/.317/.314), but might have wrapped up the AL rookie of the year award with his September performance. He had two more hits Saturday and is batting .310 with 17 runs scored and 13 RBI this month.

The Rangers have won all three of Darvish’s starts against the Angels this year, though he wasn’t exactly stingy—the righthander allowed 27 base runners in those 18 innings. In his five September starts, Darvish has failed to make it out of the sixth inning three times.

Need to know: Outfielder Craig Gentry has caught fire at the right time and has been, arguably, the team’s best hitter down the stretch. In his past nine games, he’s batting .455 and has stolen eight bases while locking down the starting spot in left field. Before this hot stretch, he was hitting just .246 on the year.

What to expect Sunday

All three teams still control their own fate, which seems strange but because those three teams are fighting for two spots instead of just one, is true. The scenarios …

— Let’s say the Indians lose on Sunday and both the Rays and Rangers win, which would create a three-way tie with 91-71 records. Because each team won a season series against the other in the group (Cleveland beat Texas, Texas beat Tampa Bay and Tampa Bay beat Cleveland), the teams were ranked by combined records against the teams in the group. Cleveland comes out on top with a 7-5 record against Texas and Tampa Bay; the Rays were 7-6 and the Rangers were 5-8.

The Indians chose to be Club A in MLB’s three-team tiebreaker, which means they’d host the Rays (who chose to be Club B) on Monday at 4:07 p.m. ET. The winner of that game earns a playoff spot as the top wild-card seed. The loser of that game plays at Texas (Club C) on Tuesday at 4:07 p.m. ET, with the winner advancing as the second wild-card and the loser going home.

So even though the Indians hold the one-game lead heading into Sunday’s action, it’s still possible they could lose that game, then lose at home on Monday to the Rays and lose again at Texas on Tuesday to fall out of the playoffs completely.

— If all three teams win on Sunday, the Indians would clinch the top wild-card seed and the Rangers and Rays would play in Texas (the Rangers won the season series 4-3) on Monday at 8:07 p.m. ET as a play-in game to the wild-card playoff game.

— If the Indians lose and either the Rangers or Rays win, the Indians would be in, and home-field advantage for the wild-card game would depend on head-to-head records. If it’s the Indians and Rays, the wild-card game would be in Tampa Bay (the Rays won that season series 4-2). If it’s the Indians and Rangers, the wild-card game would be in Cleveland (the Indians won the season series 5-1).

Got it? Good. Now, enjoy what promises to be a great Sunday afternoon of baseball.